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Biallelic C1QBP Mutations Cause Severe Neonatal-, Childhood-, or Later-Onset Cardiomyopathy Associated with Combined Respiratory-Chain Deficiencies

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Feichtinger, RG 
Oláhová, M 
Kishita, Y 
Kremer, LS 

Abstract

Complement component 1 Q subcomponent-binding protein (C1QBP; also known as p32) is a multi-compartmental protein whose precise function remains unknown. It is an evolutionary conserved multifunctional protein localized primarily in the mitochondrial matrix and has roles in inflammation and infection processes, mitochondrial ribosome biogenesis, and regulation of apoptosis and nuclear transcription. It has an N-terminal mitochondrial targeting peptide that is proteolytically processed after import into the mitochondrial matrix, where it forms a homotrimeric complex organized in a doughnut-shaped structure. Although C1QBP has been reported to exert pleiotropic effects on many cellular processes, we report here four individuals from unrelated families where biallelic mutations in C1QBP cause a defect in mitochondrial energy metabolism. Infants presented with cardiomyopathy accompanied by multisystemic involvement (liver, kidney, and brain), and children and adults presented with myopathy and progressive external ophthalmoplegia. Multiple mitochondrial respiratory-chain defects, associated with the accumulation of multiple deletions of mitochondrial DNA in the later-onset myopathic cases, were identified in all affected individuals. Steady-state C1QBP levels were decreased in all individuals' samples, leading to combined respiratory-chain enzyme deficiency of complexes I, III, and IV. C1qbp(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) resembled the human disease phenotype by showing multiple defects in oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Complementation with wild-type, but not mutagenized, C1qbp restored OXPHOS protein levels and mitochondrial enzyme activities in C1qbp(-/-) MEFs. C1QBP deficiency represents an important mitochondrial disorder associated with a clinical spectrum ranging from infantile lactic acidosis to childhood (cardio)myopathy and late-onset progressive external ophthalmoplegia.

Description

Keywords

mitochondria, multiple mtDNA deletions, oxidative phosphorylation, lactate, progressive external ophthalmoplegia, PEO, myopathy, MAM33, p32

Journal Title

American Journal of Human Genetics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0002-9297
1537-6605

Volume Title

101

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_U105697135)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00015/4)
Wellcome Trust (101876/Z/13/Z)
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Marie Sk?odowska-Curie actions (705560)
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Societal Challenges (633974)
Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (PD/BD/105750/2014)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00015/7)
This study was supported by the German BMBF and Horizon2020 through E-Rare project GENOMIT (01GM1603 and 01GM1207 to H.P.; FWF-I 2741-B26 to J.A.M.); Vereinigung zur Förderung Pädiatrischer Forschung Salzburg; EU FP7 MEET Project (317433 to H.P. and J.A.M.); Horizon2020 Project SOUND (633974 to H.P.); Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Reintegration Fellowship (Mitobiopath-705560 to C.G.); UK NHS Highly Specialised Mitochondrial Service (R.W.T.); Wellcome Centre for Mitochondrial Research (203105/Z/16 to Z.M.C.-L., R.N.L., and R.W.T.); MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Diseases (G0601943 to R.W.T. and P.F.C.); Lily Foundation (R.W.T. and K.T.); UK NIHR fellowship (NIHR-HCS-D12-03-04 to C.L.A.); Wellcome Senior Fellowship (101876/Z/13/Z to P.F.C.); UK NIHR award and MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit (MC_UP_1501/2 to P.F.C.); NIH (R01 GM0077465 and R35 GM122455 to V.K.M.); EMBO fellowship (ALTF 554-2015 to A.A.J.); UK MRC core funding for the Mitochondrial Biology Unit of the University of Cambridge (MC_U105697135 to A.R.D., P.R.G., and M. Minczuk); Portuguese Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (PD/BD/105750/2014 to P.R.G.); Italian Telethon (GSP16001 to G.P.C.); Fondazione Cariplo (2014-1010 to D.R.); Strategic Research Center in Private Universities from MEXT; and Practical Research Project for Rare/Intractable Diseases from AMED.